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All Passion Spent
Coles
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All Passion Spent in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $0.99


By None
All Passion Spent in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $0.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
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''All Passion Spent'' is the celebrated 1931 novel by British author Vita Sackville-West that serves as a meditative exploration of aging, independence, and the reclamation of self. The story follows Lady Slane (Deborah Lee), an 88-year-old widow of a former Prime Minister and Viceroy of India. After a lifetime defined by her husband's public career and the needs of her six children, she shocks her family by refusing to live under their care. Instead, she retreats to a small, crumbling house in Hampstead to finally live on her own terms. Lady Slane reflects on the artistic ambitions she abandoned to become a "perfect help-meet". The novel portrays old age not as a tragedy, but as a "second bloom" where one is finally free from the "passion" and expectations of youth. By refusing a massive inheritance from an old admirer, Mr. FitzGeorge, she inadvertently frees her great-granddaughter, Deborah, to pursue her own musical career—a path Lady Slane herself could not take.
''All Passion Spent'' is the celebrated 1931 novel by British author Vita Sackville-West that serves as a meditative exploration of aging, independence, and the reclamation of self. The story follows Lady Slane (Deborah Lee), an 88-year-old widow of a former Prime Minister and Viceroy of India. After a lifetime defined by her husband's public career and the needs of her six children, she shocks her family by refusing to live under their care. Instead, she retreats to a small, crumbling house in Hampstead to finally live on her own terms. Lady Slane reflects on the artistic ambitions she abandoned to become a "perfect help-meet". The novel portrays old age not as a tragedy, but as a "second bloom" where one is finally free from the "passion" and expectations of youth. By refusing a massive inheritance from an old admirer, Mr. FitzGeorge, she inadvertently frees her great-granddaughter, Deborah, to pursue her own musical career—a path Lady Slane herself could not take.

















